the 39 country initiative by paul w. beamish director, engaging emerging markets research centre...

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THE 39 COUNTRY INITIATIVE

by Paul W. Beamish

Director, Engaging Emerging Markets Research Centre

Executive Director, Ivey Publishing

Ivey Business School

Western University

pbeamish@ivey.uwo.ca

February 3, 2014

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Management education in Africa, particularly in the poorest countries, suffers from the greatest resource constraints of any continent on earth.

Three major challenges exist:

1. Lack of current teaching material

2. Very expensive books/photocopies so insufficient quantity of materials available

3. Too few qualified faculty

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The Ivey Business School at Western University has established a three-pronged strategy to help improve management education in Africa. The primary purpose of its approach is poverty reduction. If managers and entrepreneurs can make more sound business decisions, failures will decline and prosperity will increase. The viability of all three elements of the strategy has already been proved by Ivey over the past 20 years in different geographies.

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Background on Ivey Publishing (IP)…• Markets and distributes all Ivey-registered cases written by its

own faculty and, selectively, from external contributors.• Second largest producer and distributor of business cases in

the world. IP distributes cases and technical notes to 145,000 professors in 10,000 universities in 136 countries.

• Over 7,000 cases / technical notes in total collection.• 4,100 cases in active collection.• 230 technical notes in active collection.• Over 96% of cases have teaching notes (for professors only).• 1250 active translated cases, in 8 languages.• Over 400 Ivey Business Journal (practitioner) articles.• Over 2,000,000 copies of Ivey cases studied per year

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Ivey Case Pricing

• Standard academic price: $3.40 per case, per student, for an electronic copy.

• Emerging markets price: $1.00 per case, per student, for an electronic copy.

• The price in the world’s 39 poorest countries (those with per capita income < $2,000.): no charge. All institutions and their faculty must be registered with Ivey Publishing though. The cases can only be used in-country, and cannot be electronically distributed.

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Ivey is now providing to universities in the world’s 39 poorest countries (of which 32 are in Africa) a huge volume of management education teaching material AT NO COST. Ivey Publishing’s cases, technical notes, and IBJ articles comprise nearly 50,000 pages of proprietary content. (The cost of developing this content exceeds $50 million.) Over 1,260 professors from the 32 eligible African countries are now registered.

Challenge 1: Lack of Current Teaching Material

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Challenge 2: Expensive Books/Photocopies and Insufficient Quantity of Material Available

How Acute is This Problem? Africa students in the poorest countries: do not own laptops; they own few, if any, books; they cannot afford to photocopy content.

so…

They take turns reading the assigned content at the library. There are not enough printed copies for each person. This is NOT acceptable!

Two solutions to be pursued here:

(A) Publish a series of Region-Specific Books

(B) Ship Surplus and Used Material to African Business Schools

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Casebooks in China• Ivey’s Asian Management Institute has overseen the publication of

over 75 books of cases for the China market since the early 1990s. (China’s State Education Commission passed a law that at least 25% of the content of China’s MBA programs be made up of case studies.)

• Most of the books (whether in Chinese or English) run about 200 pages and retail for about $7.00/copy. Same price possible for Africa.

• In a meeting in Beijing in June 2011, the owner of China Machine Press, publisher of most of the books Ivey has used in China, expressed strong willingness to support a new books-for-Africa plan.

• Have obtained quotations from China-based publishers about the wholesale prices and print runs needed for a large-scale, low-cost casebook series in Africa. Funding needed.

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A Partial Solution to the Lack of Hard Copies at African Universities

• Students at North American/European b-schools collect from (A) their fellow students the cases/readings/course packs/books which they do not plan to keep or re-sell, and from (B) the local used book stores, any business-related books which it cannot sell.

• Box this content, and ship it, to the business school of their choice in Africa. Ivey shipped 9 tons of educational material to Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia, which arrived in January 2014.

• A standard 20 foot shipping container has a capacity of 1172 cubic feet (33 cubic metres). The shipping cost will typically be about $5K. This would require modest local fund raising.

• The host school will clear it through customs and be responsible for within-Africa transportation.

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Challenge 3: Too Few Qualified Faculty

In the poorest business schools in Africa, most faculty do not have PhDs, many do not have master’s degrees, salaries are low, and little faculty development is available. What can we do?• Provide teaching notes to the cases. These illustrate how to

teach the case, and how it links to course curricula (Done).• Provide professor-to-professor case teaching workshops.

Experienced case teachers visiting these institutions can offer workshops in an ad-hoc manner. Need to seek funding to provide such workshops on a systematic, country-by-country basis.

• Send out latter-year undergraduate and MBA students to “teach” short introductory business courses. The model has been proved, both outside and inside Africa.

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The LEADER Project (Leading Education and Development in Emerging Regions)

• A non-profit organization founded by Ivey MBA students in 1991 (with oversight by then Ivey Centre for International Business Director, Paul Beamish).

• Has sent over 700 Ivey undergraduate, MBA and PhD students to various emerging markets to teach foundational business skills to university students and entrepreneurs.

• Courses run 2 – 5 weeks. Host institution provides accommodation and meals for the volunteer instructor.

• For details, see www.leaderproject.com

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Ivey Short Course Teaching in Africa

• Ivey Professor Nicole Haggerty led a LEADER-style service-learning teaching program in Summer 2012 to Africa. 18 students from the undergraduate program entering 4th year made up the largest group of teaching volunteers. They worked at four locations in three countries (Kenya, Rwanda, Ghana).

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Next Steps• Continue efforts to locate and register African faculty

members with Ivey Publishing.

• Encourage other business schools in North America and Western Europe to (A) collect teaching material to be shipped to Africa and (B) establish a LEADER-style teaching program in Africa.

• Explore partnerships in Africa. Various institutions have already expressed strong interest, including the African Association of Universities.

• Raise funds for Case Teaching Workshops and publication of a series of Introductory Business Books.

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Eligible Countries for the 39 Country Initiative

• Of the 39 countries eligible to participate, 32 are in Africa: Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cote d’Ivoire, Eritrea, Ethiopia, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Liberia, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Niger, Rwanda, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

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39 Country InitiativeLast updated: February 3, 2014

Launch date: July 19, 2010Region & Country breakdown: 39 countries in 3 continents (32 Africa; 6 Asia; 1 Americas)

Region CountryPopulationJuly 2010

(in millions)Instit found

Phone/email

contacts

FacultyReg

Southern Africa

9 Comoros 0.8 1 1 1

20 Lesotho 1.9 1 1 1

22 Madagascar 21.3 11 8 26

23 Malawi 15.5 6 1 15

25 Mozambique 22.1 14 6 27

38 Zambia 13.5 13 10 23

39 Zimbabwe 11.7 15 3 28

Central Africa

10Dem Republic of Cong

70.9 52 3 66

7 Central African Rep 4.9 2 1 4

8 Chad 11.5 3   6

30 Sao Tome and Prin 0.2 1 1  

East Africa

5 Burundi 9.9 5 2 8

12 Eritrea 5.8 1 1 3

13 Ethiopia 88.0 40 18 239

19 Kenya 40.0 57 71 248

29 Rwanda 11.1 7 18 60

50 Somalia 10.2 20 25 63

35 Tanzania 41.9 30 20 75

37 Uganda 33.4 22 8 49

West Africa

3 Benin 9.1 5 1 11

4 Burkina Faso 16.2 3   4

11 Cote d’Ivoire 21.1 7 4 10

14 Gambia, The 1.8 1 2 2

15 Ghana 24.3 42 58 231

16 Guinea 10.3 1    

17 Guinea-Bissau 1.6 2    

21 Liberia 3.7 4 1 34

24 Mali 13.8 3   2

28 Niger 15.9 9   11

31 Senegal 12.3 5 1 9

32 Sierra Leone 5.3 6   8

36 Togo 6.6 3   5

South Asia1 Afghanistan 29.1 14 4 38

2 Bangladesh 156.1 66 6 441

27 Nepal 29.0 9 7 46

E & SE Asia6 Cambodia 14.5 32 22 102

26 Myanmer (BURMA) 53.4 11   5

Central Asia 34 Tajikistan 7.5 15 1 19

Cent Am & Carrib 18 Haiti 9.7 8 1 13

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A Metaphor• We are offering each university business student in 32

countries in Africa something which exceeds the value of a luxury car (i.e., the Ivey case content). Students first require (A) driving instructors(local faculty who have received case teaching workshops/instruction so they will know how to teach with cases), (B) a series of maps for a long journey (books, course packs, printed cases in sufficient quantity), and (C) a driving license (their university degree). The car will require gas/fuel (experience) and a key (a motivated student).

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